
Rachel’s Story
Singing is everything to me. It is the best way I know how to share my thoughts and feelings with the world. Singing has always felt freeing and brought me joy.

Marlee’s Story
I felt like I was starting over my junior year in college, because my body had changed so rapidly over the first two years of my voice study...You’re waking up to a new body every day.

Siobhan’s Story
Our disabilities won’t always be the same for all of us, so individual tailored plans are best.


Rebecca’s Story
(Excerpt from Stryker, 2024)
I often feel like I’m in this strange middle-ground of not really knowing where I fit, and not knowing if I’m able to claim that identity and it not hinder my jobs. I would love to talk about all of this stuff more online, but I worry that people would find it and not give me a job because of it. So, it’s that thing of wanting to claim it, wanting to speak about it, but also having to think, “Is it going to screw me over in the future?”

Charli’s Story
(Excerpt from Stryker, 2024)
When someone gets into a car accident or something and they have to use the wheelchair, it's not a choice. And I think that when you have to use it for a chronic illness, people see it more as a choice. I think people see it as giving up on trying to get better, and it's just really discouraging because, you know, I didn't have a life. I was house ridden and I started using a wheelchair and actually had some freedom again. …my mobility aid is my freedom, and my disability is the biggest source of creativity that’s ever come to me in my entire life.